It ain’t that hard. One of my uncles did it in the 1980s. He convinced a few dozen people Jeezus was returning anydaynow. They sold all their possessions and waited in his house for two weeks. Jeezus never showed up. The only reason he didn’t get his ass sued is because they first thing they teach in lawyer school is never sue anyone who doesn’t have any money.

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You cannot have a rational conversation with someone who holds irrational beliefs.

It ain’t that hard. One of my uncles did it in the 1980s. He convinced a few dozen people Jeezus was returning anydaynow. They sold all their possessions and waited in his house for two weeks. Jeezus never showed up. The only reason he didn’t get his ass sued is because they first thing they teach in lawyer school is never sue anyone who doesn’t have any money.

Sounds like good advice. Although, didn’t he have all of THEIR money? Even if they did sue, he could have gotten a high priced lawyer with his newly discovered Jesus fund.

It ain’t that hard. One of my uncles did it in the 1980s. He convinced a few dozen people Jeezus was returning anydaynow. They sold all their possessions and waited in his house for two weeks. Jeezus never showed up. The only reason he didn’t get his ass sued is because they first thing they teach in lawyer school is never sue anyone who doesn’t have any money.

What was his excuse? Did he ‘save the world’ or did Jeezuz change his mind? If he changed his mind, why didn’t they let him know before they bankrupted themselves?

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Church; where sheep congregate to worship a zombie on a stick that turns into a cracker on Sundays…

I think Darron’s example points out that cult leaders fall into two distinct classes: the con men who want power, wealth and control; and the charismatic crackpots who get a strange delusion and convince other people to accept it but don’t necessarily profit.